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The Black Cat

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The Black Cat

After a road accident in Hungary, the American honeymooners Joan and Peter and the enigmatic Dr. Werdegast find refuge in the house of the famed architect Hjalmar Poelzig, who shares a dark past with the doctor.

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Release : 1934
Rating : 6.9
Studio : Universal Pictures, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Set Designer, 
Cast : Boris Karloff Bela Lugosi David Manners Julie Bishop Egon Brecher
Genre : Horror Mystery

Cast List

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Reviews

Vashirdfel
2018/08/30

Simply A Masterpiece

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FeistyUpper
2018/08/30

If you don't like this, we can't be friends.

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Bumpy Chip
2018/08/30

It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.

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Mathilde the Guild
2018/08/30

Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.

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coolcat01
2018/03/29

This film is great! Who's that sexy cat from the poster? Why no name in the credits?

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GusF
2015/03/18

One of the best Universal Monsters films that I've seen, it is a wonderfully macabre and often disturbing film which packs a great deal into its 65 minute running time. It was the first of eight films to star Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi and they're both excellent. It was a very clever idea to make the audience think that the slightly creepy Dr. Vitus Werdegast (Lugosi) was the villain of the story before introducing the true villain, the downright frightening Hjalmar Poelzig (Karloff). David Manners, who previously worked with Lugosi in "Dracula" and with Karloff in "The Mummy", isn't the best actor in the world but he's fine. However, I didn't think that either of the film's female cast members, Jacqueline Wells and Lucille Lund, could act to save their lives but neither of them play a big part so I can overlook that. The film's style and distinctive set design owes much to the German Expressionist films of the Weimar era, which isn't too surprising since its Austrian director Edgar G. Ulmer collaborated with both F. W. Murnau and Fritz Lang. It deals with many disturbing themes such as necrophilia, torture, flaying (the film's most memorable scene), human sacrifice and possibly paedophilia (depending on what age the younger Karen is intended to be). Most of this is either implied or kept off- screen but this worked to the film's advantage as less is often more in horror films. The black cat plays far too small a role to justify its title but it's a bizarre minor masterpiece.

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Jack Higginbotham
2014/05/03

The Black Cat is a 1934 horror film starring Horror icons Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff in their first of many films together. The film concerns the story of Dr. Vitus Werdegast (played by Lugosi)a war veteran who has been a prisoner for the past 15 years, returning to seek revenge on famed architect Hjalmar Poelzig (played by Karloff) where he learns the horrifying fate of both his wife and daughterKarloff and Lugosi really are the main draw of The Black Cat. The film includes a married couple (played by David Manners and Julie Bishop) who get caught up in the two mens rivalry, but really aren't all that interesting. Lugosi and Karloff have two very different acting styles which I find makes this film more enjoyable to watch. Lugosi is constantly over-acting, milking every scene he's in for any dramatic effect he can, his still strong Hungarian accent gives his lines an atmosphere all their own. Karloff, on the opposite end of the spectrum likes to downplay his role. His stare is captivating, those cold, dead eyes represent the purest of evil in his character and manages to create a sense of Dread every time he's on screen.The film was made for just over $90,000 and surprisingly you cant tell. Director Edgar G. Ulmer used a number of different shots and lighting techniques in order to give Poelzig's castle its grand scale and eerie atmosphere. The plot really isn't emphasized much, the film is a battle of wits between Lugosi and Karloff and the plot is simply along for the ride. Its not a terrible plot, it has some great ideas but it doesn't have the same detail and tightness that Dracula, Frankenstein or even the follow up Lugosi/Karloff vehicle The Raven.Overall, The Black Cat is worth the watch for any fan of Lugosi and Karloff. Both actors give great, chilling performances in their own way and the atmosphere from Ulmers direction is just the icing on the cake.

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Bonehead-XL
2013/12/01

"The Black Cat" remains a fascinating film. It must have been like an explosion for audiences in '34. Unlike many of the horror films of the period, the picture is decidedly modern. Its horrors didn't come from supernatural creatures, ghosts, or even bloodless mystery/thriller murders. Instead, it deals with topics like war crimes, torture, Satanism, and implications of necrophilia, rape, and incest. "The Black Cat" hasn't aged a day and remains as potent, stylish, and horrifying now and when it first premiered.Technically, the movie looks fantastic. Hjalmar Poelzig's mansion today looks a bit like a swanky art-deco apartment. It's still a bizarre location, with glass screens randomly bisecting rooms and round swivel chairs artistically placed. As strange as the living room looks, no set stands out more then the Satanic altar at the end. A huge double-t leans against the main altar, like an overturn crucifix. Poelzig, dressed in a red robe, leans against an X-shaped podium. Behind him, a giant pipe organ stands, an odd, crystal-like shape emerging from it. Probably the movie's most famous bit of art design evolves the perfectly preserve body of Bela Lugosi's dead wife, floating in the middle of a glass tube, her hair up on end, like an underwater angel.The creativity extends to the film's direction. Edgar G. Ullman, who later directed surreal film-noir "Detour" and sci-fi favorite "The Man from Planet X," worked on many of the most famous German Expressionism film. (He blatantly references F.W. Murnau's "The Last Laugh," with a verbose cab driver character.) Karloff's introduction involves a slow pan into a bedroom, a white sheet hanging over the bed. A near-nude woman lays beside him as he rises up, totally silhouetted in shadow behind the sheet. Upon seeing Jacqueline Wells as virginal bride Joan, in the forefront of a shot, we see Poelzig clutch a statue of a nude woman, visually illustrating his desire to own her. The shadow of a black cat is cast huge against Lugosi, causing him to fall backwards into a glass wall, drowning in his own phobia. The Black Mass is full of creative angles, starring down at the organ keys, quick cuts between the Satanic worshippers' faces. My favorite moment in the film is one of the most dream-like and inexplicable. As Karloff speaks in voice-over, a monologue about the game Lugosi and him are about to play, about how similar they really are, we the viewer are led on a first-person perspective tour through the underground chambers of the mansion, through the secret doors, up the winding staircase. It's a spellbinding moment. The film is important for its extensive use of music, a daring move at the time. It's a great score too, dark and dreamy, providing exactly the tone needed for the story.Casting the two towering legends of horror as rivals in a game of cruelty is the film's most brilliant masterstroke. Casting both against type was also a surprising move. Hjalmar Poelzig is probably Karloff at his most sinister. The usual whimsy in his eye gives way to a detached psychosis. His mind is cunning but utterly cold. Inspired by Aleister Crowley, Poelzig cuts a sinister figure. His close-crop hair cut, extravagant outfits, and slight eye-liner makes him look like a time-displaced David Bowie. Even then, Karloff can't help but make the guy a little sympathetic. When gazing upon the dead wife's face, he speaks not with a dangerous obsession, but instead a sincere love of her beauty. The hatred that burns between Poelzig and Wendegast is legendary. Wendegast has spent his entire life obsessing over vengeance, determined to unleash his rage on his tormenter. Poelzig meanwhile has gone out of his way to steal or destroy everything Wendegast loves. Took and murder his wife before, never once questioning the incestuous circumstances of the move, marrying his own step-daughter, just to destroy his rival's sanity. Lugosi's gave-it-his-all theatrics works perfectly for a man consumed by revenge. Though toned from the original script, the movie makes it clear that neither man is sane. Both are dangerous, roping the innocent married couple into their deadly game of chess.Not that David Manners or Jacqueline Wells give bad performance. They both do quite well and have a funny, natural chemistry together. But they're outsiders, exiles in the freakish, nightmare world "The Black Cat" inhabits. No doubt they were intended as audience surrogates in 1934.Climaxing with a still disturbing, explicit moment of torture, "The Black Cat" can still raises goosebumps. I wonder if Chan-Wook Park or Jee Woon-Kim have seen it, since you can draw some parallels with their revenge epics. It's a masterpiece of classic horror, floating across the screen like a filmed nightmare.

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